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The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark
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The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark
Current price: $42.99
Barnes and Noble
The Fantastic Expedition of Dillard & Clark
Current price: $42.99
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In the minds of many fans, 1968 was Year One for country-rock, the year that
's
and
'
heralded the arrival of a fresh new sound. But former
vocalist
had already made some prescient gestures toward fusing country with folk-rock on his 1967 solo debut,
, and when
released his first collaborative effort with banjo virtuoso
a year later, they created a mature and confident sound that was exciting, thoughtful, and deeply soulful in a way those better-known albums were not.
initially grew out of a series of informal jams between
, but by the time they went into the studio,
,
, and their picking partners
, and
had honed their music to a fine point; there's still a breezy sense of freedom and discovery in this music, but the musicians mesh with one another beautifully, and while elements of bluegrass, vintage country, folk, and rock all inform this music, the songs (mostly written by
in collaboration with
, or both) and arrangements integrate the pieces seamlessly.
's banjo and fiddle figure prominently in the arrangements, and his performances are expert and heartfelt, but
is the true cornerstone of this album; he rarely, if ever, sang this well in the studio, and the poetic sensibility and intelligent, graceful tone of the songs brought out the best in him, with "She Darked the Sun," "Something's Wrong," and "The Radio Song" standing proudly alongside anything in his catalog. The
partnership proved short-lived, and their second and final album was a disappointing set dominated by covers, but
is one of the first, inarguable classics of country-rock. Time has been kinder to this album than most of the genre's founding works, and it's a work rooted in tradition while reveling in freedom and new ideas and making the most of them all. ~ Mark Deming